Many users ask: "Why use this software when Windows has built-in display calibration?"
The answer lies in hardware-level control.
For example, lowering brightness in Windows crushes blacks by altering the signal. Lowering brightness via CFX Maestro changes the backlight LED intensity, preserving dynamic range. This is critical for professional photo editing and competitive FPS games where shadow detail matters.
CFX Maestro is a software application developed by Cambridge Nanotech (now part of Oxford Instruments) for the control, monitoring, and automation of atomic layer deposition (ALD) systems. Version 2.3 is a legacy release designed for Windows-based personal computers interfacing with CFX series ALD reactors (e.g., Fiji, Phoenix, OpAL).
For researchers performing High-Resolution Melt (HRM) analysis, version 2.3 offers robust tools to distinguish genotypes. The software automatically calculates melting temperatures (Tm) and visualizes differences in melt curves to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).
Yes, if:
No, if: